| Literature DB >> 28667225 |
Olalekan Lee Aiyegbusi1,2, Derek Kyte1,2, Paul Cockwell1,3, Tom Marshall1,2, Mary Dutton3, Anita Slade1,2, Neil Marklew4, Gary Price4, Rav Verdi4, Judi Waters4, Keeley Sharpe4, Melanie Calvert1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) has a major effect on the quality of life and health status of patients and requires accurate and responsive management. The use of electronic patient-reported outcome measures (ePROMs) could assist patients with advanced pre-dialysis CKD, and the clinicians responsible for their care, by identifying important changes in symptom burden in real time. We report the protocol for 'Using Patient-Reported Outcome measures (PROMs) to promote quality of care and safety in the management of patients with Advanced Chronic Kidney Disease' (PRO-trACK) project, which will explore the feasibility and validity of an ePROM system for use in patients with advanced CKD. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The project will use a mixed-methods approach in three studies: (1) usability testing of the ePROM system involving up to 30 patients and focusing on acceptability and technical performance/stability; (2) ascertaining the views of patient and clinician stakeholders on the optimal use and administration of the CKD ePROM system-this will involve qualitative face-to-face/telephone interviewing with up to 30 patients or until saturation is achieved, focus groups with up to 15 clinical staff, management and IT team members; (3) psychometric assessment of the system, within a cohort of at least 180 patients with advanced CKD, to establish the measurement properties of the ePROM. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This project was approved by the West Midlands Edgbaston Research Ethics Committee (Reference 17/WM/0010) and received Health Research Authority (HRA) approval on 24 February 2017.The findings from this project will be provided to clinicians at the Department of Renal Medicine, Queen Elizabeth Hospitals, Birmingham (QEHB), NHS England, presented at conferences and to the Kidney Patients' Association, British Kidney Patient Association and the British Renal Society. Articles based on the findings will be written and submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.Entities:
Keywords: nephrology; qualitative research; statistics&research methods; usability testing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28667225 PMCID: PMC5726096 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016687
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Description of questionnaires
| Measure | Description |
| Kidney Disease Quality of Life-36 (KDQOL-36) | A 36-item health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measure designed for use in patients with kidney disease undergoing dialysis. Derived from the Kidney Disease Quality of Life-Short Form. |
| Integrated Patient Outcome Scale-Renal | A symptom-specific measure with 11 questions for use with patients with advanced kidney disease to assess their care needs. |
| EuroQol Five-Dimension Five-Level questionnaire | A generic utility measure with a self-classifier and a visual analogue scale, which can be used to measure health status. |
Figure 1Screenshot of the myhealth@QEHB login page.
Definitions of domains, measurement properties and aspects of measurement properties
| Domain | Measurement property | Aspect of measurement property | Definition |
| Reliability | The degree to which the measurement is free from measurement error | ||
| Reliability (extended definition) | The extent to which scores for patients who have not changed are the same for repeated measurement under several conditions: for example, using different sets of items from the same HR-PROs (internal consistency), over time (test–retest) by different persons on the same occasion (inter-rater) or by the same persons (ie, raters or responders) on different occasions (intrarater) | ||
| Internal consistency | The degree of the interrelatedness among the items | ||
| Reliability | The proportion of the total variance in the measurements which is because of ‘true’* differences among patients | ||
| Measurement error | The systematic and random error of a patient’s score that is not attributed to true changes in the construct to be measured | ||
| Validity | The degree to which an HR-PRO instrument measures the construct(s) it purports to measure | ||
| Content validity | The degree to which the content of an HR-PRO instrument is an adequate reflection of the construct to be measured | ||
| Face validity | The degree to which (the items of) an HR-PRO instrument indeed looks as though they are an adequate reflection of the construct to be measured | ||
| Construct validity | The degree to which the scores of an HR-PRO instrument are consistent with hypotheses (for instance with regard to internal relationships, relationships to scores of other instruments or differences between relevant groups) based on the assumption that the HR-PRO instrument validly measures the construct to be measured | ||
| Structural validity | The degree to which the scores of an HR-PRO instrument are an adequate reflection of the dimensionality of the construct to be measured | ||
| Hypotheses testing | Idem construct validity | ||
| Cross-cultural validity | The degree to which the performance of the items on a translated or culturally adapted HR-PRO instrument are an adequate reflection of the performance of the items of the original version of the HR-PRO instrument | ||
| Criterion validity | The degree to which the scores of an HR-PRO instrument are an adequate reflection of a ‘gold standard’ | ||
| Responsiveness | The ability of an HR-PRO instrument to detect change over time in the construct to be measured | ||
| Responsiveness | Idem responsiveness | ||
| Interpretability† | The degree to which one can assign qualitative meaning—that is, clinical or commonly understood connotations—to an instrument’s quantitative scores or change in scores |
Reproduced with permission from Caroline Terwee, COSMIN.
*The word ‘true’ must be seen in the context of the CTT, which states that any observation is composed of two components—a true score and error associated with the observation. ‘True’ is the average score that would be obtained if the scale were given an infinite number of times. It refers only to the consistency of the score and not to its accuracy.12
†Interpretability is not considered a measurement property but an important characteristic of a measurement instrument.
CTT, classical test theory; HR-PRO, health-related patient-reported outcome.